Revealing and reconstructing the 3D Li-ion transportation network for superionic poly(ethylene) oxide conductor.
Cheng-Dong FangYing HuangYi-Fan SunPeng-Fei SunKe LiShu-Yang YaoMin-Yi ZhangWei-Hui FangJia Jia ChenPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Understanding the Li-ions conduction network and transport dynamics in polymer electrolyte is crucial for developing reliable all-solid-state batteries. In this work, advanced nano- X-ray computed tomography combined with Raman spectroscopy and solid state nuclear magnetic resonance are used to multi-scale qualitatively and quantitatively reveal ion conduction network of poly(ethylene) oxide (PEO)-based electrolyte (from atomic, nano to macroscopic level). With the clear mapping of the microstructural heterogeneities of the polymer segments, aluminium-oxo molecular clusters (AlOC) are used to reconstruct a high-efficient conducting network with high available Li-ions (76.7%) and continuous amorphous domains via the strong supramolecular interactions. Such superionic PEO conductor (PEO-LiTFSI-AlOC) exhibites a molten-like Li-ion conduction behaviour among the whole temperature range and delivers an ionic conductivity of 1.87 × 10 -4 S cm -1 at 35 °Ϲ. This further endows Li electrochemical plating/stripping stability under 50 μA cm -2 and 50 μAh cm -2 over 2000 h. The as-built Li|PEO-LiTFSI-AlOC|LiFePO 4 full batteries show a high rate performance and a capacity retention more than 90% over 200 cycling at 250 μA cm -2 , even enabling a high-loading LiFePO 4 cathode of 16.8 mg cm -2 with a specific capacity of 150 mAh g -1 at 50 °Ϲ.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- magnetic resonance
- ion batteries
- computed tomography
- raman spectroscopy
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- gold nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- mass spectrometry
- network analysis
- positron emission tomography
- water soluble
- single molecule
- high density
- room temperature
- molecularly imprinted
- tandem mass spectrometry